Bfi 16 ld: National Service



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Negative Strategies:


Unlike other LD topics, I feel like this topic provides some flexibility for the negative strategy. Though the negative is limited in its ability to provide counter plans or counter advocacies, this topic does have a substantial amount of negative ground. Depending on the debater there is a lot of possible traditional ground and critical ground for the negative. The first strategy that debaters should be thinking through is a critical lens. Some critical strategies that could be very compelling for this topic is either militarism or bio power.

However, the reason I say there are two different critical strategies is because of the two different definitions of national service. If the affirmative defines nationals service as a military draft, the negative can run militarism. This strategy would argue that militarism sets up a cycle of fear and violence. This strategy could possibly generate some bigger impacts such as war, sexual violence, and or value to life. Comparatively, the second critical strategy that debaters should think through is bio power. Bio powers basic premise is that institutions of power control the body. This strategy would not be solely focused on national service for the link level, but rather bio-power could and should be more focused on the resolutions use of the word “compulsory.” This critical framing of the negative could provide debaters a chance to dive deeper in this notation of obligation and service.

Beyond, critical arguments the negative can make more directed responses to the affirmative. However, the negative should be wary of basing their entire case on refutations to the affirmative. Negative strats should try and have an external impact that the debater can go for. What I mean, is the negative case should not solely rest on merely refuting the affirmative case. A strong negative case should setup the debater to be able to turn the affirmative. But some traditional strategies that the negative can think through are the harms of outreach programs to education. There is a substantial amount of evidence that suggests that programs such as Teach for America and AmeriCorps have caused some damage to the education and communities they are trying to serve. Debaters should also look into possibly argument why instituting a national service could hurt government legitimacy and or it’s functioning. This strategy would focus the debate on issues of functionality of the topic rather than is the national service a good idea.

Value:


For both the affirmative and negative the main issue both cases should be focused on is community welfare and government effectiveness. Since the topic is more focused on whether or not government control is necessity the value and criterion should set up the best way for the judge to evaluate that question.

Morality-



Kant, ’59 (Preserving one’s life is a universalized moral duty. Immanuel, Foundations of the Metaphysics of Morals, trans. Lewis White Black, Professor of Philosophy, University of Rochester, 1959, pg 14)
On the other hand, it is a duty to preserve one’s life, and moreover, everyone has a direct inclination to do so but for that reason the often anxious care which most [people] take of it has no intrinsic worth, and the maxim of doing so has no moral import. They preserve their lives according to duty, but not from duty. But if adversities and hopeless sorrow completely take away the relish for life, if an unfortunate man, strong in soul, is indignant rather than despondent or dejected over his fate and wishes for death, and yet preserves his life without loving it and form neither inclination nor fear but from duty – then his maxim has a moral import.
Using morality for either case would frame the debate on what an individual’s duty is and how that improves the society as a whole. Morality for the affirmative could set up the debate to be about protecting the community. However, the affirmative would also have to establish why is a “national service,” a duty. On the flip side, the negative could utilize morality to establish that a person’s only obligation is preserving their life.

Societal Welfare-

Spicker 1988 (Paul Spicker. Professor UK. is a writer and commentator on social policy. "Principles of Social Welfare: an introduction to thinking about the welfare state. " Book. pg 15 http://www.spicker.uk/books/Paul%20Spicker%20-%20Principles%20of%20Social%20Welfare.pdf)


The idea of 'social welfare' appears, in form, to refer to the 'common good', improvements that benefit almost everyone in society, a ground for consensus. In practice, there may be conflicts of interest. There are likely to be losers as well as gainers, diswelfare as well as welfare. The value bases on which these conflicts are judged form a major part of the discussion of this book.
The basic idea of societal welfare is that the most moral is the one that maximizes the common good for the society. Societal Welfare as a value for both the affirmative and the negative to frame the debate on what the collective should be doing for their communities. Though this value maybe better fitting for the affirmative, the negative can make arguments why evaluating the ends of the national service could harm the society as a whole.

Governmental Legitimacy-

Buchanan, 2002 ( Allen Buchanan Professor of philosophy at Duke University and also professor of the Philosophy of International Law at the Dickson Poon School of Law at King's College, London. "Political Legitimacy and Democracy." Vol. 112, No. 4 (July 2002), pp. 689-719. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.1086/340313)


According to the terminology I am recommending, an entity has political legitimacy if and only if it is morally justified in wielding political power, where to wield political power is to attempt to exercise a monopoly, within a jurisdiction, in the making, application, and enforcement of laws. The monopoly feature is important if we are to distinguish political power from mere coercion. A state not only uses coercion to secure compliance with its rules, it also attempts to establish the supremacy of those rules and endeavors to suppress others who would enforce its rules or promulgate their own rules. Note, however, that supremacy does not imply that there are no limits on state control. Supremacy refers to the lack of a rival for the state’s making, application, and enforcement of law within an assumed jurisdiction (typically understood as a territory). This is compatible with the scope of the rules it imposes being limited, for example, by human rights principles that place constraints on how the state may deal with its own population.
Governmental legitimacy as a value posses an interesting question in the debate. Since the topic is surrounded by what should the United States do? Governmental legitimacy allows for debaters to question what is considered to be a moral action if it done by government institutions. For both the affirmative and negative, if students what to use this as a value they ought to establish what it means for a government to be legitimate and how do we quantify that action.



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